Literary usage of Siphonophores

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1.The American Naturalist by American Society of Naturalists, Essex Institute (1882)"'"THE siphonophores which we have thus far considered all A agree in this
particular, that they have a float attached at one end of the stem to buoy it up ..."

2.The Teleo-mechanics of Nature: Or, The Source, Nature and Functions of the by Hermann Wettstein (1911)"HW) "Professor Haeckel says: 'The siphonophores or colonial sea-nettles are found
floating on the smooth surface of the tropical seas. ..."

3.A Contribution to American Thalassography: Three Cruises of the United by Alexander Agassiz, U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey (1888)"It is closely allied to those which Studer, the naturalist of the "Gazelle,"
regards as strictly deep- sea siphonophores. ..."

4.A Manual of the Common Invertebrate Animals: Exclusive of Insects by Henry Sherring Pratt (1916)"By far the greater number of siphonophores are of the first type. ... A modification
of this type is seen in the deep-sea siphonophores of the genera ..."

5.The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and (1910)"Woltereck considers the siphonophores most nearly allied to the ... Haeckel considers
that the siphonophores have two distinct ancestral lines of evolution: ..."

6.The Soul of Man: An Investigation of the Facts of Physiological and by Paul Carus (1891)"These siphonophores are best compared to a floating flower-bush, the leaves,
blossoms, and fruits of which look like polished crystal-glass of the most ..."

7.A Contribution to American Thalassography: Three Cruises of the United by Alexander Agassiz, U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey (1888)"We have two or three species of a distinct group of siphonophores, ... I have
already alluded to this group of siphonophores as driven into Narragansett Bay ..."

8.A Contribution to American Thalassography: Three Cruises of the United by Alexander Agassiz, U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey (1888)"We have two or three species of a distinct group of siphonophores, ... I have
already alluded to this group of siphonophores as driven into Narragansett Bay ..."